social

Upside-Down Tomato Buckets

My husband built this frame work to hold three tomato plants. The grass in the top of the buckets helps hold the moisture in. He cuts it with a scissors. The chains on each side allows him to raise the buckets as needed.

Advertisement



By DeeJay from Delphos, OH

Upside-Down Tomato Buckets
 

Add your voice! Click below to comment. ThriftyFun is powered by your wisdom!

 

Silver Feedback Medal for All Time! 472 Feedbacks
July 20, 20081 found this helpful
Top Comment

Simply popping the lids on the buckets will also stop evaporation and keep moisture in. I plant another tomato or a green pepper plant on the top of mine -- doesn't stop the evaporation process, but gives me extra food in otherwise unused space. This year, I have cantaloupes growing under my buckets, so in effect, I am gardening on three levels.

Advertisement

By-the-way, the buckets do not have to be filled with dirt. You can add more as the plant roots fill the container. It is extremely important to thoroughly water the plants before they dry out, or at least every other day, and to fertilize them too.

 
February 12, 20160 found this helpful

you are awesome

 
By DeeJay (Guest Post)
July 22, 20081 found this helpful
Top Comment

The buckets are cat litter buckets. We have gotten about 10 tomatoes from the far right plant. The center plant now has about 30 on it just waiting for it to ripen. The far left plant only has two very large tomatoes so far.

The hole is 1 inch, some stones were placed around the opening but I think coffee filters would also work. The handle of the bucket is just bent over the rail. I like the idea of planting something else in the top.

 
 
July 17, 20081 found this helpful

Very, very cool!

 
July 17, 20082 found this helpful

I love this. I have seen tomatoes grown upside down but this is the best yet. Thanks so much for sharing. Lori

 
By jamish (Guest Post)
July 17, 20081 found this helpful

Mine dos not look like that. I have a whole lot less dirt than that in my bucket, so maybe that really is my problem. Seems to me I need to get a big bucket like that to hold my tomato plant, I may copy this. Thanks for the GREAT idea.

 

Gold Feedback Medal for All Time! 791 Feedbacks
July 18, 20082 found this helpful

That is ingenious! I hope you get loads of tomatoes to eat yourself and to share with friends. Thanks for sharing this with us and God bless you.

 
By Lynda (Guest Post)
July 18, 20081 found this helpful

There is a trademarked idea like this on the web, and several decorated containers with the same idea. I thought I could just make my own, but failed as others here say they have. I wonder if it's just that all conditions have to be just right? Are there tomatoes on the vines in the pictures? I'm not seeing them, if so. What planting medium/soil and food do you use? How often do you water them?

Advertisement


Do you think the idea works because the roots are warmed by the sun or because the leaves are shaded by the buckets....or both?
God bless you. : )

 

Silver Feedback Medal for All Time! 378 Feedbacks
July 18, 20082 found this helpful

I didn't plant my upside down tomato thingie because I had nowhere to hang it. Voila!

 
July 19, 20081 found this helpful

Hi, Can you give a bit more info on setting up the buckets to hold the tomato plants? How big a hole is in the bottom where the tomato plant is threaded through?

Advertisement

What keeps soil from seeping through, especially when you water the tomato's? Thanks.

 
By Deb (Guest Post)
July 22, 20080 found this helpful

How do you attach the buckets to the pole? Could you post a close up? Thank you!

 
By DeeJay (Guest Post)
July 22, 20081 found this helpful

I could only upload one photo at a time. Here's the other
Some of the leaves are starting to turn yellow. Is that
too much water? It has rained a lot here. Far left plant is
Beefsteak, Center is Roma, far right is cherry. We also
put a tablespoon of sugar in the soil of each bucket. Makes them very sweet.

 
 
By Bullseye (Guest Post)
December 28, 20081 found this helpful

Hi. I came across your site while looking for info regarding hanging tomatoes. I just received a hanging kit for Christmas from a relative and I figure it probably cost them about $30.00. Well, after I put it up I got to thinking that I could make one a lot cheaper. I went and purchased two reusable grocery sacks (the material is identical to the store bought kit) for a $1.00 apiece. Then I bought a 55 quart bag of Lamberts potting soil for $10.00. Throw in two Home Depot five gallon bucket lids at $1.00 each and two Celebrity tomato plant starters at $1.25 each.

Advertisement

Toss in a couple of scoops of Osmocote that I had laying around and that's it. Total cost for the two, $16.50.

Below is a link to a video of my garden and the hanging tomatoes. I live in sunny south Florida so I start my garden around November when the threat of hurricanes has passed. I was gonna make a video of me making the homemade kits but I probably would have gotten the camera all dirty, haha. Hope you enjoy.

Bullseye

www.youtube.com/watch?v=qja6TZTl1SY

 
Anonymous
February 12, 20160 found this helpful

We have done this for many years local newspaper did article on
My husband tomatoes. We hung it on end of clothesline. We taught 4H and had them out petunias in top. Made very pretty also we put a sponge over the bottom hole and cut hole in it that kept soil from running out.

 
July 26, 20210 found this helpful

Love this idea. It has given me a great solution to a problem in my backyard. I have an old metal frame from a swing that's too big to remove.

Advertisement

Now I can put it to good use and make as part of my landscape design. Thanks so much

 

Silver Post Medal for All Time! 267 Posts
July 26, 20210 found this helpful

Sounds great! Please share a photo when you get it all set up.

 

Add your voice! Click below to comment. ThriftyFun is powered by your wisdom!

 
In This Page
< Previous
Categories
Home and Garden Gardening Growing Growing FoodJuly 17, 2008
Pages
More
🎂
Birthday Ideas!
💘
Valentine's Ideas!
🍀
St. Patrick's Ideas!
Facebook
Pinterest
YouTube
Instagram
Categories
Better LivingBudget & FinanceBusiness and LegalComputersConsumer AdviceCoronavirusCraftsEducationEntertainmentFood and RecipesHealth & BeautyHolidays and PartiesHome and GardenMake Your OwnOrganizingParentingPetsPhotosTravel and RecreationWeddings
Published by ThriftyFun.
Desktop Page | View Mobile
Disclaimer | Privacy Policy | Contact Us
Generated 2024-02-09 04:48:41 in 2 secs. ⛅️️
© 1997-2024 by Cumuli, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
https://www.thriftyfun.com/Upside-Down-Tomato-Buckets.html